Gaza attack nixed; Hamas offers up soldier

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Gaza attack nixed; Hamas offers up soldier By RAVI NESSMAN, Associated Press Writer



Israel called off a planned ground invasion of northern Gaza on Thursday, giving diplomacy another chance to free a 19-year-old soldier held by gunmen allied with the Palestinians' ruling Hamas group.

Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak said militants agreed to a conditional release of the kidnapped soldier but that Israel had yet to accept their terms, which he did not specify. Israel said it was not familiar with any such offer.

Despite its postponement of a northern offensive, Israeli aircraft and artillery pounded sites across the coastal strip during the day, hitting suspected weapons factories, an electrical transformer and militant training camps. No deaths or serious injuries have been reported in any of the attacks since ground operation began early Wednesday in southern Gaza.

On Gaza's southern border, hundreds of Palestinian and Egyptian police formed human cordons to block Palestinians trying to escape into Egypt after militants blasted a hole in a cement wall near the crossing.
Israel also vowed to hunt down the killers of a kidnapped 18-year-old, whose body was found Thursday in the West Bank with a gunshot wound to the head. Hamas-linked militants said they killed him.

Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, a moderate, met with Prime Minister Ismail Haniyeh of Hamas and spoke twice with Mubarak to try to end the crisis, an Abbas aide said.

In remarks published Friday, Mubarak told the pro-government Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram that "Egyptian contacts with several Hamas leaders resulted in preliminary, positive results in the shape of a conditional agreement to hand over the Israeli soldier as soon as possible to avoid an escalation. But agreement on this has not yet been reached with the Israeli side."

Gideon Meir, a senior Israeli Foreign Ministry official, said Israel did not know of such an offer and would have no comment until later Friday.
"The soldier will only be released unconditionally and there will be no negotiations with a gang of terrorists and criminals," Meir told The Associated Press. "There is nothing to talk with them about."
Earlier, Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz said significant diplomatic developments were possible, though he did not indicate there had been a breakthrough.

"Right now, our thoughts are focused on the unconditional liberation of the kidnapped soldier," he said in a speech to air force graduates. "The efforts to bring about his return are being carried out intensively through various channels."

Israel said the crisis will end when Cpl. Gilad Shalit is released.
"If the Palestinians act now to release Cpl. Shalit and hand him back to us ... we would immediately initiate a dramatic reduction in tension," Israeli Foreign Ministry spokesman Mark Regev said. "He is the primary issue, he is the primary reason for the crisis."

After previous diplomatic efforts by Egypt, Jordan, France and other nations failed, Israel sent thousands of soldiers into vacant areas of southern Gaza on Wednesday.

But on Thursday, Israel decided to delay a further offensive into northern Gaza at Egypt's request, an Israeli official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of the secrecy of the diplomacy.
Israeli officials said the delay was also meant to defuse possible international criticism of a broad ground campaign in Gaza. In Moscow, foreign ministers from the Group of Eight industrialized nations called on the Palestinians to free the soldier and urged Israel to act with restraint.
Anger flared across the Middle East over Israel's assault, and many Arabs criticized their governments for not aiding the Palestinians. The Egyptian government's top rival, the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, urged Egyptians to gather at pro-Palestinian demonstrations Friday, the Muslim Sabbath.

The request from Egypt came after Israel increased the stakes in the search for the soldier by arresting more than one-third of the Hamas-led Palestinian Cabinet, including the deputy prime minister, in a series of early morning raids in the West Bank.

Israel hinted that the 64 Hamas officials were intended as bargaining chips for Shalit, but one official said the opportunity for preventing a blowup was slipping away.

"We are at the edge of a cliff here, and I would urge the Palestinian leadership to release Cpl. Shalit," Regev said.

Osama Hamdan, an exiled Hamas official based in Lebanon, declined to say whether the group would be willing to trade Shalit for its officials.
"It is premature to discuss this matter," he said. "If the Israelis want to trade them (the Hamas politicians) for the soldier, then let them say it frankly and then we will react."

There has been no sign of life from Shalit since his abduction Sunday. The Popular Resistance Committees — one of the groups holding him — did not confirm his condition in a statement Thursday, but insisted on swapping him for Palestinian prisoners held in Israeli jails. Israel has rejected that demand.

The group also said it killed Eliahu Asheri, the 18-year-old West Bank settler whose body was discovered Thursday. The militants had said they would kill Asheri if the raid on Gaza did not stop, but an Israeli military official said he was shot in the head shortly after he was abducted Sunday.

Government spokesman Asaf Shariv said Asheri's killers would be arrested, and Israel would bring them to trial. "Their days as free people are numbered," he said.

The Israeli offensive into Gaza began three days after militants tunneled under a Gaza crossing and attacked an Israeli army post, killing two soldiers and abducting Shalit. Thousands of Israeli troops backed by tanks entered vacant areas in southern Gaza, where the military thinks Shalit is being held.

Israel bombed Gaza's power station, and much of the territory was receiving only intermittent electricity Thursday. Further artillery shelling knocked out two electricity transformers in northern Gaza, plunging towns there into darkness, Palestinian officials said. The army said it was targeting empty fields.

Israeli warplanes also bombed militant camps, empty fields, roads and suspected weapons factories in southern Gaza, and gunboats fired at open areas in the north. An airstrike also targeted a car that witnesses said was carrying an Islamic Jihad activist, but the militant escaped.
Militants launched volleys of homemade rockets and four landed inside Israel, causing no damage or injuries, the army said. Islamic Jihad and the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, a militant group affiliated with Abbas' Fatah Party, claimed responsibility.

Palestinians who hoped for better times after Israel's withdrawal from Gaza last year were bitterly disappointed by the conflict.
"I was very happy. I thought the beaches would be open. I thought I would travel and I expected more economic projects to enter Gaza," said Ismail el-Shaikh, 22, who works in a pizza parlor in the southern city of Khan Younis. "That didn't happen. Hamas came instead, and the situation is more difficult."

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060629/ap_on_re_mi_ea/israel_palestinians_321;_ylt=AqafpTb3jUKKg3TByUnUIGQUvioA;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl
 
So...... Hamas gets elected to office and yet they continue to try and pull this :cen:? Sounds like an air tight case for invasion of Palestine, once it comes into existence that is.
 
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